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Rehabilitation on cerebellar ataxic patients with multiple sclerosis: A systematic review

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 101, Issue 12, Pages 1773-1780

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.25235

Keywords

cerebellar ataxia; multiple sclerosis; physiotherapy; rehabilitation

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This systematic review investigates physiotherapeutic rehabilitation techniques for managing cerebellar ataxia caused by MS and finds that most patients experienced a decrease in symptoms post-treatment. However, the overall quality of the included studies was of moderate level, highlighting the need for further multicenter research.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory, autoimmune disease of the Central Nervous System with a vast spectrum of clinical phenotypes. A major aspect of its clinical presentation is cerebellar ataxia where physiotherapy and treatment modalities play a significant role on its management. This systematic review aims to investigate the physiotherapeutic rehabilitation techniques regarding the management of cerebellar ataxia due to MS and secondary to stratify each protocol as part of a multi structural personalized rehabilitation approach based on the gravity of the symptoms. A Pubmed Medline, Scopus and Web of Science research was performed using the corresponding databases. The results were screened by the authors in pairs. In our study, six (6) non-pharmacological interventional protocols, 3 Randomized Controlled Trials and 3 pilot studies, were included with a total of 145 MS patients. Physiotherapeutic techniques, such as NDT-Bobath, robotic and visual biofeedback re-education protocols and functional rehabilitation techniques were included. In most cases cerebellar ataxic symptoms were decreased post-treatment. The overall quality of the studies included was of moderate level (level B). Rehabilitation in cerebellar ataxia due to MS should be based on multicentric studies with the scope of adjusting different types of treatments and physiotherapeutic techniques based on the severity of the symptom. image

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